Capt. Stacy Rostorfer, commander of Company B, 1st Battalion, 149th Aviation Regiment, a Texas Army National Guard unit from Houston's Ellington Field, gives his soldiers a motivational speech upon the completion of their training with Division West's 166th Aviation Brigade at Fort Hood, Texas. Rostorfer and his unit are set to deploy to Afghanistan. (Photo by 1st Lt. Kat Kaliski, 166th Aviation Brigade, Division West, Public Affairs)

Capt. Stacy Rostorfer, commander of Company B, 1st Battalion, 149th Aviation Regiment, a Texas Army National Guard unit from Houston's Ellington Field, gives his soldiers a motivational speech upon the completion of their training with Division West's 166th Aviation Brigade at Fort Hood, Texas. Rostorfer and his unit are set to deploy to Afghanistan. (Photo by 1st Lt. Kat Kaliski, 166th Aviation Brigade, Division West, Public Affairs)

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FORT HOOD, Texas - The 166th Aviation Brigade is busy training five units for deployments. One unit in particular, the Texas Army National Guard's Company B, 1st Battalion, 149th Aviation Regiment from Houston's Ellington Field, recently passed their validation and will deploy to Afghanistan's Regional Command-South in the coming weeks.

What made the unit's training with the 166th Aviation Brigade so unique was that, this time around, the brigade worked in concert with the 21st Cavalry Air Combat Brigade, said Lt. Col. Robert Donnelly of 1st Battalion, 291st Aviation Regiment, 166th Aviation Brigade, the unit directly responsible for training the company.

"Normally, this type of joint training is reserved for battalion-size elements," Donnelly said. "However, with changes in the force downrange, this company will take up the hefty mission normally executed by a larger battalion."

The 21st Cavalry Brigade trains Army aviation units on a niche aircraft, the Apache Longbow, and their role in training the Guard aviators was to certify the company received proper instruction prior to deploying.

The 166th Aviation Brigade is tasked with ensuring that Army National Guard and Reserve units are fully trained on their green (land) and blue (aerial) training. This is known as a pre-mobilization validation process that, once complete, enables the qualified unit to deploy and execute missions successfully.

Together, the 166th Aviation Brigade and the 21st Cavalry Brigade tested and retested the pilots and crew, placing them in environments that closely emulate the ones they will face downrange.